Thursday, June 25, 2026
Smart Again
  • Home
  • Trending
  • Politics
  • Law & Defense
  • Community
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
Smart Again
  • Home
  • Trending
  • Politics
  • Law & Defense
  • Community
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
Smart Again
No Result
View All Result
Home Community

Without dragons, fantasy wouldn’t have worked on TV

June 24, 2026
in Community
Reading Time: 7 mins read
0 0
A A
0
Without dragons, fantasy wouldn’t have worked on TV
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


Before we do a “House of the Dragon” flyby to examine its place in high fantasy’s conquest of TV and film, let’s talk about Sheepstealer.

The “Game of Thrones” prequel boasts many dragons, most of them bound to the Targaryen royal bloodline. You could sing their names in a tune set to the intro melody of “Rudolph, the Red-Nosed Reindeer,” if you wanted: “There’s Caraxes and Syrax and Vhagar and Vermax/ Sunfyre and Dreamfyre and a dead one called Arrax . . .”

Next to them, Sheepstealer boasts no glorious lineage or handsome metallic scales. He’s just some mud-brown monstrosity roaming the Vale of Arryn and treating livestock like campfire marshmallows. As Season 3 opens, the wild dragon has yet to be officially introduced by name, although he makes his first appearance in the second season finale. That’s when Rhaena Targaryen (Phoebe Campbell), who abandoned a caravan meant to take her to safety, finds him after a long, desperate hunt — just a girl standing in front of an untamed drake, asking him to love her.

(Photograph by Theo Whiteman/HBO) Phoebe Campbell in “House of the Dragon.”

Readers of George R.R. Martin’s books may recognize that this diverges from the written version of Westeros lore. “Fire & Blood” says that Sheepstealer was claimed by a “small brown girl” called Nettles. The series assigns that role to the highborn daughter of Daemon Targaryen (Matt Smith), a young lady who wants to be a dragonrider more than anything, but has no dragon to her name. Worse, the one that might have passed down to her, her late mother’s dragon Vhagar, was stolen by her cruel cousin Aemond (Ewan Mitchell).

Lacking a dragon — and, in her mind, sufficient worth to her family — Rhaena is relegated to watching over her youngest half-brothers, Viserys and Aegon, while her sister Baela (Bethany Antonia) soars through the clouds on the back of her scaled steed Moondancer. Oof, right? If I were Rhaena, I’d run for the hills too.

What happens next may hit everyone who dreams of saddling a dragon squarely in the chest. Rhaena doesn’t wait for her luck to change. She pursues what she wants, regardless of the danger. She is that queen who’s ready to claim what’s hers or die trying.

Take another step back, though, and consider how recently dragon stories became mainstream imaginings in the first place, along with fantasy’s ascent on our screens.

The global popularity of “A Song of Ice and Fire” makes it easy to forget that not long ago, studios viewed stories like it as too niche to merit large investment.

Warner Bros. Discovery and HBO blew tremendous resources on Season 3 of “House of the Dragon” simply to make sure one significant skirmish, the Battle of the Gullet, looks as terrifying as Martin spells out on the page. More terrifying, actually; the book’s account is fairly straightforward, mentioning little about, say, sailors sliding around in their shipmates’ blood and guts.

A behind-the-scenes teaser trailer boasts of expending 25 tons of propane to create a realistic approximation of dragon fire and setting a new world record for setting stunt performers on fire in a single take. For the curious, the number to beat is 23 – but please, don’t try that at home.

If one were to step back in time through some magical gateway and read those figures to a past HBO executive, that person probably would have died of a laughing fit. That’s because for the longest time, high fantasy was associated not with spectacle but pasty, awkward kids playing Dungeons & Dragons in their mother’s basements.

Anything related to J.R.R. Tolkien and C.S. Lewis, the modern-day grandsires of popular high fantasy, came before American audiences as cartoon specials by the likes of Rankin/Bass or Ralph Bakshi, who in 1978 attempted to bring “The Lord of the Rings” to life with rotoscoped animation.

For three glorious seasons between 1983 and 1985, ‘80s kids also had the “Dungeons & Dragons” animated series with its two girl heroes: an acrobat and a thief with an invisibility cloak. No pet dragons, though — just a baby unicorn, representing the fantasy mascot ruling many of that era’s pre-teen accessory drawers.

 

 

Dragon girls are basically a modern version of the unicorn girl, or the horse girl. Their foremothers may have read The Pit Dragon Chronicles by Jane Yolen, Ursula K. Le Guin’s Earthsea Cycle books and the works of Anne McCaffrey, who gave us the Dragonriders of Pern.

Meanwhile, the unicorn faithful were served by one of Tom Cruise’s earliest action roles, 1985’s “Legend,” which cast him as a hero pledged to rescue a virginal damsel and her magical equine companion from a satanic cad played by Tim Curry. Around that same time, the biggest dragon to hit theaters, Falkor from 1984’s “The NeverEnding Story,” looked more like a whale-sized puggle than anything fierce.

This doesn’t mean we don’t love a luck dragon. We absolutely do! Know that “Stranger Things” warmed my cold stone heart when Dustin sang a rendition of “The NeverEnding Story” theme while his friends were being chased by a gigantic Mind Flayer.

(Photo by dpa/picture alliance via Getty Images) A still from “The NeverEnding Story.”

And one might even trace today’s would-be Rhaena Targaryens — and Daenerys emulators, we know you’re out there — to that shaggy flying dog. Somehow, he made it OK to view dragons as snuggly pals, like in Cressida Cowell’s “How to Train Your Dragon” books (or the 2010 movie based on them), or majestic, noble beasts, as in “Eragon” (or the 2006 movie based on it) and the rest of Christopher Paolini’s Inheritance Cycle novels. Maybe they also lived for PBS’ animated “Dragon Tales.”

Point being, these women and men did not grow up in a land where dragons were relegated to culture’s shame basement or only worth rendering cheaply, a la “Sharknado,” for a Syfy Channel Saturday afternoon feature. They came of age when Orlando Bloom’s Legolas, kitted out in a blond wig, armor and prosthetic pointy ears, was a teen heartthrob.

The Targaryen version of “Dynasty” that HBO is airing now owes a debt to Peter Jackson’s “The Lord of the Rings” trilogy and its follow-up, “The Hobbit,” for its existence. Those movies proved there is a market for large-scale live-action fables employing practical and realistic special effects, along with massive sets built on location.

That last bit is a huge reason why “House of the Dragon,” like “Game of Thrones” before it, is now a massive, multi-season prestige play. That, and the fact that many of the people making these movies and shows rolled 20-sided dice with their pals back in the day.

(© Amazon Content Services LLC) “The Legend of Vox Machina.” Courtesy of Prime.

Today, dragons and dungeon crawls are common entertainments. You can watch Critical Role’s actual play productions on Twitch, YouTube or see animated versions of their campaigns in the form of “The Legend of Vox Machina” and “The Mighty Nein.”

Fantasy franchises are potent weapons in streaming’s race to build content arsenals. Netflix has “The Witcher” saga. Amazon made three seasons of “The Wheel of Time” and is producing “The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power,” which is expected to cost more than a billion dollars by the time it ends. (Its third season premieres on Nov. 11, 2026 on Prime Video.)

Want more from culture than just the latest trend? The Swell highlights art made to last.Sign up here

Next to that show’s glittering costumes, huge cast and massive props arsenal, Sheepstealer and his fellow dragons seem downright reasonable.

Plus, at long last, their increased screentime in Season 3 delivers the whirling, conflagratory dance “House of the Dragon” has teased from its series premiere, realizing what fantasy visionaries thought impossible to realistically render on any size screen until recently.

But it may also be a victory for dragonriders like Rhaena. Maybe. Among the many grim lessons that play out in this show is that every sought-after power comes with a huge cost. For a second-born daughter intended to inherit a life of thankless labor, the price might be worth it. Finding out will be quite the adventure.

New episodes of “House of the Dragon” air at 9 p.m. Sundays on HBO and HBO Max.

Read more

from Salon’s Culture newsletter, The Swell

 

 



Source link

Tags: dragonsfantasyWorkedWouldnt
Previous Post

How right-wing media turns Trump’s failures into conspiracies

Next Post

Side-eyeing the ’90s summer trend

Related Posts

Scottish men have already won the World Cup
Community

Scottish men have already won the World Cup

June 24, 2026
Side-eyeing the ’90s summer trend
Community

Side-eyeing the ’90s summer trend

June 24, 2026
Google’s investment in AI tools for A24 sparks backlash
Community

Google’s investment in AI tools for A24 sparks backlash

June 23, 2026
The unexpected lessons of Paul McCartney’s Wings era
Community

The unexpected lessons of Paul McCartney’s Wings era

June 23, 2026
Music mogul Clive Davis dies at 94
Community

Music mogul Clive Davis dies at 94

June 22, 2026
“Maddie’s Secret” is perfectly imperfect
Community

“Maddie’s Secret” is perfectly imperfect

June 22, 2026
Next Post
Side-eyeing the ’90s summer trend

Side-eyeing the '90s summer trend

Socialist sweep reveals New York City’s rising power centers

Socialist sweep reveals New York City’s rising power centers

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
There’s more than one empathy crisis

There’s more than one empathy crisis

March 30, 2026
The 4chan-coded ideology behind Elon Musk’s war on normies

The 4chan-coded ideology behind Elon Musk’s war on normies

June 4, 2025
Interior Secretary Falls Apart And Admits Trump Is Grifting Off America’s 250th Anniversary

Interior Secretary Falls Apart And Admits Trump Is Grifting Off America’s 250th Anniversary

May 31, 2026
What Pope Leo XIV’s history can tell us about his papacy

What Pope Leo XIV’s history can tell us about his papacy

May 10, 2025
Fox Host Serves Up Heaping Pile Of Whataboutism To Justify Trump Slush Fund

Fox Host Serves Up Heaping Pile Of Whataboutism To Justify Trump Slush Fund

May 22, 2026
How actor Greg Evigan became “possessed” by The Beatles

How actor Greg Evigan became “possessed” by The Beatles

May 26, 2026
“They stole an election”: Former Florida senator found guilty in “ghost candidates” scandal

“They stole an election”: Former Florida senator found guilty in “ghost candidates” scandal

0
The prime of Dame Maggie Smith is a gift

The prime of Dame Maggie Smith is a gift

0
The Hawaii senator who faced down racism and ableism—and killed Nazis

The Hawaii senator who faced down racism and ableism—and killed Nazis

0
The murder rate fell at the fastest-ever pace last year—and it’s still falling

The murder rate fell at the fastest-ever pace last year—and it’s still falling

0
Trump used the site of the first assassination attempt to spew falsehoods

Trump used the site of the first assassination attempt to spew falsehoods

0
MAGA church plans to raffle a Trump AR-15 at Second Amendment rally

MAGA church plans to raffle a Trump AR-15 at Second Amendment rally

0
Even the internet’s favorite pool guy has no clue how to fix the reflecting pool

Even the internet’s favorite pool guy has no clue how to fix the reflecting pool

June 25, 2026
Hannity Weeps After Big Night For ‘Radical Socialists’

Hannity Weeps After Big Night For ‘Radical Socialists’

June 25, 2026
Hunter Biden Drops Wisdom Bomb On Democrats

Hunter Biden Drops Wisdom Bomb On Democrats

June 25, 2026
Why urban Democrats love socialists now

Why urban Democrats love socialists now

June 24, 2026
Trump Threatens To Tank The Midterm For Republicans If They Won’t Pass The SAVE Act

Trump Threatens To Tank The Midterm For Republicans If They Won’t Pass The SAVE Act

June 24, 2026
Why Trump is blocking a big housing bill

Why Trump is blocking a big housing bill

June 24, 2026
Smart Again

Stay informed with Smart Again, the go-to news source for liberal perspectives and in-depth analysis on politics, social justice, and more. Join us in making news smart again.

CATEGORIES

  • Community
  • Law & Defense
  • Politics
  • Trending
  • Uncategorized
No Result
View All Result

LATEST UPDATES

  • Even the internet’s favorite pool guy has no clue how to fix the reflecting pool
  • Hannity Weeps After Big Night For ‘Radical Socialists’
  • Hunter Biden Drops Wisdom Bomb On Democrats
  • About Us
  • Advertise with Us
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • DMCA
  • Cookie Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Contact Us

Copyright © 2024 Smart Again.
Smart Again is not responsible for the content of external sites.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Trending
  • Politics
  • Law & Defense
  • Community
  • Contact Us

Copyright © 2024 Smart Again.
Smart Again is not responsible for the content of external sites.

Go to mobile version